RE: [ACTION-385] Common regular expression syntax

On Mon, 2013-02-04 at 13:46 -0700, Yves Savourel wrote:
> Hi Shaun,
> 
> Many thanks for this Shaun.
> 
> I've added it to our ITS processing to check the its:allowedCharacters
> value and noticed that some of the test files have the expression "[^*
> +]" which seems to be not valid based this checking expression. (I
> still have to make sure my validation code is right).
> 
> Is that the case? If yes, how would we express "any chars but '*' and
> '+'"?

My mistake. It seems "^" maintains special meaning even when not
at the beginning of the expression or a character class, so we
have to escape it.

^(\.|
\[\^?-?(([	

 -,&#x2E-[_-퟿-�𐀀-#x10FFFF;]|\\n|\\r|\\t|\\]|\\^|\\-|\\\\)(-([	

 -,&#x2E-[_-퟿-�𐀀-#x10FFFF;]|\\n|\\r|\\t|\\]|\\^|\\-|\\\\))?)+-?\])?$

^(\.|
\[\^?-?(([\x{09}\x{0A}\x{0D}\x{20}-\x{2C}\x{2E-\x{5B}\x{5F}-\x{D7FF}\x{E000}-\x{FFFD}\x{10000}-#x10FFFF}]|\\n|\\r|\\t|\\]|\\^|\\-|\\\\)(-([\x{09}\x{0A}\x{0D}\x{20}-\x{2C}\x{2E-\x{5B}\x{5F}-\x{D7FF}\x{E000}-\x{FFFD}\x{10000}-#x10FFFF}]|\\n|\\r|\\t|\\]|\\^|\\-|\\\\))?)+-?\])?$

^(\.|\[\^?-?(([\u0009\u000A\u000D\u0020-\u002C\u002E-\u005B\u005F-\uD7FF
\uE000-\uFFFD]|\\n|\\r|\\t|\\]|\\^|\\-|\\\\)(-([\u0009\u000A\u000D
\u0020-\u002C\u002E-\u005B\u005F-\uD7FF\uE000-\uFFFD\u10000-#x10FFFF]|\
\n|\\r|\\t|\\]|\\^|\\-|\\\\))?)+-?\])?$

re = new Regex("^(\\.|\\[\\^?-?(([\\u0009\\u000A\\u000D\\u0020-\\u002C\
\u002E-\\u005B\\u005F-\\uD7FF\\uE000-\\uFFFD]|\\\\n|\\\\r|\\\\t|\\\\]|\\
\\^|\\\\-|\\\\\\\\)(-([\\u0009\\u000A\\u000D\\u0020-\\u002C\\u002E-\
\u005B\\u005F-\\uD7FF\\uE000-\\uFFFD]|\\\\n|\\\\r|\\\\t|\\\\]|\\\\^|\\\
\-|\\\\\\\\))?)+-?\\])?$");

> 
> cheers,
> -yves
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Shaun McCance [mailto:shaunm@gnome.org] 
> Sent: Monday, February 04, 2013 11:53 AM
> To: public-multilingualweb-lt@w3.org
> Subject: Re: [ACTION-385] Common regular expression syntax
> 
> On Sun, 2013-01-27 at 12:30 -0500, Shaun McCance wrote:
> > So what I think this leaves us with is character classes [abc], ranges 
> > [a-c], and negations [^abc], there "^" and "]" must never appear 
> > unless backslash-escaped, "-" may be backslash-escaped or put at the 
> > beginning or end, the escape sequences "\n", "\r", "\t", "\d", and 
> > "\D" may be used, and literal "\" is escaped as "\\".
> > 
> > Importantly, you must never have an unescaped backslash, because some 
> > dialects may treat it as the beginning of an escape sequence that 
> > means something special.
> > 
> > This is a very limited subset, but I think it's what we have to use. 
> > I'm now going to try to make a portable RE that matches these portable 
> > RE character classes.
> 
> Upon further investigation, it seems some engines allow Unicode characters outside 0-9 for \d, so that's out too. There's an open question of what characters can be referred to. I decided to use the definition of Char in XML 1.0:
> 
> http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml/#charsets
> 
> It's hard to reference these, because many of the range boundary characters are unassigned, so effectively unprintable. I think we don't want to embed the literal character U+D7FF in the spec.
> 
> Here is the proposed regular expression escaped with XML numeric character entities, as if it were put into an XML document:
> 
> ^(\.|
> \[^?-?(([	

 -,&#x2E-[_-퟿-�𐀀-#x10FFFF;]|\\n|\\r|\\t|\\]|\\^|\\-|\\\\)(-([	

 -,&#x2E-[_-퟿-�𐀀-#x10FFFF;]|\\n|\\r|\\t|\\]|\\^|\\-|\\\\))?)+-?\])?$
> 
> (Email will almost certainly add line breaks. Ignore them.)
> 
> There are two ways I know of to escape characters (not bytes) in different engines: \x{2234} and \u2234. The \u syntax can only reference Plane 1 characters, and works in everything except XSD and Perl/PCRE. The \x{} syntax is only Perl/PCRE, but can specify any character.
> 
> Here it is with \x{}, for Perl/PCRE only:
> 
> ^(\.|
> \[^?-?(([\x{09}\x{0A}\x{0D}\x{20}-\x{2C}\x{2E-\x{5B}\x{5F}-\x{D7FF}\x{E000}-\x{FFFD}\x{10000}-#x10FFFF}]|\\n|\\r|\\t|\\]|\\^|\\-|\\\\)(-([\x{09}\x{0A}\x{0D}\x{20}-\x{2C}\x{2E-\x{5B}\x{5F}-\x{D7FF}\x{E000}-\x{FFFD}\x{10000}-#x10FFFF}]|\\n|\\r|\\t|\\]|\\^|\\-|\\\\))?)+-?\])?$
> 
> And here is a regular expression that matches a subset of our subset, limited to Plane 1, with the \u escape:
> 
> ^(\.|\[^?-?(([\u0009\u000A\u000D\u0020-\u002C\u002E-\u005B\u005F-\uD7FF
> \uE000-\uFFFD]|\\n|\\r|\\t|\\]|\\^|\\-|\\\\)(-([\u0009\u000A\u000D
> \u0020-\u002C\u002E-\u005B\u005F-\uD7FF\uE000-\uFFFD\u10000-#x10FFFF]|\
> \n|\\r|\\t|\\]|\\^|\\-|\\\\))?)+-?\])?$
> 
> And remember, the backslashes and escaped backslashes are significant to the regular expression engine. If you're putting that into a string in a language like Java or C#, you need to escape the escapes:
> 
> re = new Regex("^(\\.|\\[^?-?(([\\u0009\\u000A\\u000D\\u0020-\\u002C\
> \u002E-\\u005B\\u005F-\\uD7FF\\uE000-\\uFFFD]|\\\\n|\\\\r|\\\\t|\\\\]|\\
> \\^|\\\\-|\\\\\\\\)(-([\\u0009\\u000A\\u000D\\u0020-\\u002C\\u002E-\
> \u005B\\u005F-\\uD7FF\\uE000-\\uFFFD]|\\\\n|\\\\r|\\\\t|\\\\]|\\\\^|\\\
> \-|\\\\\\\\))?)+-?\\])?$");
> 
> --
> Shaun
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 

Received on Monday, 4 February 2013 21:29:08 UTC